His removal from office likely saved the Israel-Egypt peace treaty.
The Muslim Brotherhood’s Arab fall.
Its future is up to the Egyptian public.
No more iron discipline.
The mainstream media are convinced, on no evidence, that Israel supported Egypt’s military coup. What Israel cares about, and wants Washington to care about, is. . .
Egypt’s future right now is civil strife with a steady flow of violence: probably not as ugly as in Syria but bad enough to disrupt. . .
The Obama administration’s embrace of and subsequent dissociation from the Muslim Brotherhood has cost it the respect of Islamists, moderates, and secularists alike.
Since the overthrow of Mohamed Morsi, the Egyptian military has been shutting down the tunnels between Egypt and Gaza—to universal indifference in the international community.
The new transitional government charged with leading Egypt into an uncertain future looks uncannily similar to the old transitional government that Morsi replaced.
With the overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Hamas has lost a major ally, and Gaza may lose its only open border. But the. . .
The struggle in Cairo is not about the future of Egyptian democracy; it is the desperate flailing of a revolutionary movement with no agenda beyond rage and dissatisfaction.
The Sinai Peninsula is poised to become another terrorist breeding ground on Israel’s border—especially if Egypt continues to treat it as a fringe concern.
Egypt's president Mohamed Morsi would rather go to war with Ethiopia over its plan to dam the Nile than consult Israel for expert advice on water management.